The San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department's TrainingAcademy is certified by California'sPeace Officer Standards and Training (P.O.S.T.). The purpose of the physical agility is to assure the department that the applicant has sufficient endurance, strength and agility to perform physical tasks similar to those that could be required of a Deputy Sheriff. The physical agility test is the exact test required to pass the Sheriff's Academy. The physical agility test consists of the following five events:
1) 99 YardObstacle Course - Run a 99 yard obstacle course consisting of several turns, 34 inch obstacle and a number of curb height obstacles
2) BodyDrag - Lift and drag 165 pound life-like dummy 32 feet
3) Chain LinkFence - Climb a 6 foot chain link fence followed by a 30 yard run
4) Solid Fence Climb - Climb a 6 foot solid wall followed by a 30 yard run
5) 500 yard run - Run 500 yards (equivalent to 1 lap plus 60 yards of a standard running track)
The test is scored on a "total points" basis. All applicants must accumulate enough points to meet the minimum passing score.

San Bernardino is the poorest city of its size in California, mired in its fourth year of bankruptcy. Industries left, the middle class shrank, the working poor struggle to rise and the destitute fall. Yet there are people in San Bernardino who work tirelessly to resurrect the city for the next generations. Although their paths are different, their trajectories meet at the same question: Can San Bernardino be saved?
SUBSCRIBE FOR MORE VIDEOS AND NEWShttp://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=losangelestimes
LET'S CONNECT:
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Twitter ► https://twitter.com/LATimesL.A. Times ► http://www.latimes.com/

published:09 Nov 2015

views:117648

As televised news events go, it had a touch of the surreal about it.
Two days after the San Bernardino mass shooting, scores of reporters stormed into the home of Syed Farook and Tashfeen Malik, two of the crime's main suspects, broadcasting live while rummaging through their personal effects.
Airing images of family members and releasing sensitive material that only a few hours earlier had been part of an FBI investigation, the coverage brought the journalistic ethics of a number of news organisations into question.
Hashtags like #Thisisntjournalism were trending while reporters were still in the house, live on air.
The ensuing media coverage, which combines two big issues in the US right now - the so-called 'war on terror' and gun control - prompted Republican presidential contender, Donald Trump, to call for a blanket ban on Muslims entering the US, while several media outlets went into a frenzy focusing on the suspects religious beliefs as a primary motive for the killings.
Talking us through the story are: Erik Wemple, The Washington Post's media critic; Kelly McBride, the vice president of the Poynter Institute; Ali Harb, a reporter with Arab American News and NPR's media correspondent David Folkenflik.
Other stories on Our Radar this week: In Somalia, a journalist has died after a bomb was planted in her car and analysts are blaming the armed group al-Shabab. In China, four journalists have been suspended for a typo that claimed President Xi had resigned and Britain’s The Sun newspaper has apologised for an article that purportedly showed how easy it is for potential terrorists to travel across Europe, which turned out to be fake.
Social media videos: the end of Journalism?
Native social media videos are the next evolution in news consumption. Producers who were once battling with channel flicking are now trying to catch your eye online before you click past. And some news outlets Al Jazeera's AJ+, Buzzfeed and NowThis have so far enjoyed success with their online models.
YouTube has just turned ten this year but thanks to Facebook's new video strategy and the rising popularity of platforms like Instagram and Snapchat, the audience for videos on social media has grown exponentially and the competition for audience share has grown very fierce. Short form text on screen and rapid fire visuals feature prominently in the native world, but how much does the quest for instant gratification affect the quality of the journalism?
The Listening Post's Paolo Ganino reports on native social news videos and what this new genre says about how we consume news.
Dutch filmmakers Sacha Harland and AlexanderSpoor from the YouTube channel, Dit Is Normaal (This Is Normal) recently conducted an experiment on the streets of The Netherlands. They selected a few choice passages from the Bible, disguised it as a Quran, and then asked passers-by what they thought about the writings. The results say a lot about the unconscious bias that is present in many of us. The Holy QuranExperiment has racked up millions of views online.
- Subscribe to our channel: http://bit.ly/AJSubscribe
- Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/AJEnglish
- Find us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/aljazeera
- Check out our website: http://www.aljazeera.com/

published:12 Dec 2015

views:4383

Two days after the San Bernardino mass shooting, scores of reporters stormed into the home of Syed Farook and Tashfeen Malik, two of the crime's main suspects, broadcasting live while rummaging through their personal effects.
Airing images of family members and releasing sensitive material that only a few hours earlier had been part of an FBI investigation, the coverage brought the journalistic ethics of a number of news organisations into question.
Hashtags like #Thisisntjournalism were trending while reporters were still in the house, live on air.
The ensuing media coverage, which combines two big issues in the US right now - the so-called war on terror and gun control - prompted Republican presidential contender, Donald Trump, to call for a blanket ban on Muslims entering the US, while several media outlets went into a frenzy focusing on the suspects' religious beliefs as a primary motive for the killings.
Talking us through the story are: Erik Wemple, The Washington Post's media critic; Kelly McBride, the vice president of the Poynter Institute; Ali Harb, a reporter with Arab American News; and NPR's media correspondent David Folkenflik.
- Subscribe to our channel: http://bit.ly/AJSubscribe
- Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/AJEnglish
- Find us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/aljazeera
- Check out our website: http://www.aljazeera.com/

The San Bernardino shooter posted allegiance to ISIS on Facebook... so how'd we miss that? Why'd we let her into the country?

published:16 Dec 2015

views:12398

GoFundMe https://m.gofund.me/defending-our-constitutional-rights
Patreon https://www.patreon.com/californiaguardian
Paypal https://paypal.me/californiaguardian
Help fight for your Constitutional protections. Out and about in San Bernardino with HDCW and Teen4Justice came across the County Jail. Support https://www.gofundme.com/defending-our-constitutional-rights This video is for educational and training purposes and contains news worthy content meant to educate and inform the viewer

San Bernardino shooting suspects Syed Farook and Tashfeen Malik did not pledge their allegiance to ISIS on Facebook before the December 2 attack, according to FBI director James Comey who told a press conference on Wednesday morning that they communicated in "private, direct messages." This means that Malik's views weren't discussed openly at all, as the the New York Times reported on December 12, and would not have been caught by any review process. Is there any evidence that Farook and Malik conveyed jihadist sentiments on social media? Watch it on the Lip News with ElliotHill and Mark Sovel.
http://www.slate.com/blogs/the_slatest/2015/12/16/fbi_now_says_san_bernardino_shooters_didn_t_post_facebook_jihad_messages.html
Newest Lip News playlist:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=derCzswOz_k&index=1&list=PLjk3H0GXhhGcjJDo6cQBCQprDMQyUQY3r
CRIMETIME clips playlist –
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tZOhzW_QfLE&index=1&list=PLjk3H0GXhhGeC9DbpSnIvd2i9BHh2dBvv
BYOD (Bring Your Own Doc) Highlight Videos-
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w83eIj9jvbo&index=1&list=PLjk3H0GXhhGeu2DCf6Ouo7hTsA5QB2MAL
MEDIA MAYHEM short videos playlist -
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xx6bGm0Mma4&index=1&list=PLjk3H0GXhhGcz4un-zws5sMlCLk3NNjDP
http://www.thelip.tv
https://www.facebook.com/thelip.tv
http://www.youtube.com/theliptv

The San Bernardino Tunnel is part of the A13 as a single carriageway freeway and therefore passes through one bore without a central physical structure. As there is only one lane per direction, overtaking (passing other vehicles) inside the tunnel is not permitted. The speed limit of 80km/h (50mph) is enforced by means of speed-check cameras. This road tunnel is considerably less prone to traffic jams than the St. Gotthard Tunnel.

The old name Vogelberg may refer to the migratory birds who pass by here every year in large flocks. These have now also discovered the tunnel as a "shortcut". Sometimes, the traffic must be stopped so that the birds find their way undisturbed.

The route first became important as a mule track in the fifteenth century when the route between Thusis and Splügen was known as the Via Mala. A road for wheeled vehicles was opened in 1770; this road was significantly improved between 1821 and 1823, financed in part by the Kingdom of Sardinia, keen to improve a trade route connecting Genoa and Piedmont to the Graubünden that was not directly controlled by Austria.

Traffic flow was much facilitated when in 1967, the San Bernardino road tunnel was completed, since then vehicle traffic on the pass has been reduced, benefiting those taking the time to avoid the tunnel. The pass road is only open in summer.

Located in southeast California, the thinly populated deserts and mountains of this vast county stretch from where the bulk of the county population resides in two Census County Divisions, some 1,422,745 people as of the 2010 Census, covering the 450 square miles (1,166km2) south of the San Bernardino Mountains in San Bernardino Valley, to the Nevada border and the Colorado River.

Architecture and design

Local politicians requested ATSF to build a new station on a much larger scale than the previous. The new station, designed by architect W.A. Mohr, cost $800,000 (equivalent to $12,586,000in 2016) to build and was officially opened on 15 July 1918. At that time, it was the largest railway station west of the Mississippi River. The San Bernardino Sun wrote "Santa Fe's Station to be the finest in the west." A few years after the depot's opening, an extension was added that included a Harvey House and living quarters.

San Bernardino (torrent)

The origins of its name lie with the Franciscan convent of San Bernardino which was established in 1483 near the mouth of the river, between Intra and Pallanza. The buildings are no longer extant.

Course

The torrent is formed by the confluence of two smaller streams, the Rio Valgrande and the Rio Pogallo, at Ponte Casletto in Val Grande. Its drainage basin comprises the areas of Val Grande and Val Pogallo; its course, and its tributaries are characterised by deep ravines and gorges.

San Bernardino (Verona)

History

The church's origin are connected to the presence of San Bernardino in the city from 1422, during which he founded a convent of nuns for the order of the Minor Friars and, later, another one for monks. He was canonized in 1450, six years after his death, and in 1451 his successor Giovanni daCapestrano started the construction of a large complex for the order in Verona thanks of the support of the Venetian doge Francesco Foscari.

This was consecrated in 1453, though the nave and its ceiling were completed only in 1466. Later a smaller aisle was added. The six bells in E are rung with Veronese bellringing art.

Overview

The church has a nave and a single aisle. The simple façade is in brickwork, with a Renaissance portal decorated by three saints figures.

Physical Agility Test

The San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department's TrainingAcademy is certified by California'sPeace Officer Standards and Training (P.O.S.T.). The purpose of the physical agility is to assure the department that the applicant has sufficient endurance, strength and agility to perform physical tasks similar to those that could be required of a Deputy Sheriff. The physical agility test is the exact test required to pass the Sheriff's Academy. The physical agility test consists of the following five events:
1) 99 YardObstacle Course - Run a 99 yard obstacle course consisting of several turns, 34 inch obstacle and a number of curb height obstacles
2) BodyDrag - Lift and drag 165 pound life-like dummy 32 feet
3) Chain LinkFence - Climb a 6 foot chain link fence followed by a 30 yard run
4) Solid Fence Climb - Climb a 6 foot solid wall followed by a 30 yard run
5) 500 yard run - Run 500 yards (equivalent to 1 lap plus 60 yards of a standard running track)
The test is scored on a "total points" basis. All applicants must accumulate enough points to meet the minimum passing score.

First Amendment Audit: City Of Colton And San Bernardino post office

This video is for educational and informational purposes only

33:27

San Bernardino: Broken | Los Angeles Times

San Bernardino: Broken | Los Angeles Times

San Bernardino: Broken | Los Angeles Times

San Bernardino is the poorest city of its size in California, mired in its fourth year of bankruptcy. Industries left, the middle class shrank, the working poor struggle to rise and the destitute fall. Yet there are people in San Bernardino who work tirelessly to resurrect the city for the next generations. Although their paths are different, their trajectories meet at the same question: Can San Bernardino be saved?
SUBSCRIBE FOR MORE VIDEOS AND NEWShttp://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=losangelestimes
LET'S CONNECT:
Google+ ► https://plus.google.com/+latimes
Facebook ► https://www.facebook.com/latimes
Twitter ► https://twitter.com/LATimesL.A. Times ► http://www.latimes.com/

25:01

San Bernardino shooting: How not to cover breaking news - The Listening Post (Full)

San Bernardino shooting: How not to cover breaking news - The Listening Post (Full)

San Bernardino shooting: How not to cover breaking news - The Listening Post (Full)

As televised news events go, it had a touch of the surreal about it.
Two days after the San Bernardino mass shooting, scores of reporters stormed into the home of Syed Farook and Tashfeen Malik, two of the crime's main suspects, broadcasting live while rummaging through their personal effects.
Airing images of family members and releasing sensitive material that only a few hours earlier had been part of an FBI investigation, the coverage brought the journalistic ethics of a number of news organisations into question.
Hashtags like #Thisisntjournalism were trending while reporters were still in the house, live on air.
The ensuing media coverage, which combines two big issues in the US right now - the so-called 'war on terror' and gun control - prompted Republican presidential contender, Donald Trump, to call for a blanket ban on Muslims entering the US, while several media outlets went into a frenzy focusing on the suspects religious beliefs as a primary motive for the killings.
Talking us through the story are: Erik Wemple, The Washington Post's media critic; Kelly McBride, the vice president of the Poynter Institute; Ali Harb, a reporter with Arab American News and NPR's media correspondent David Folkenflik.
Other stories on Our Radar this week: In Somalia, a journalist has died after a bomb was planted in her car and analysts are blaming the armed group al-Shabab. In China, four journalists have been suspended for a typo that claimed President Xi had resigned and Britain’s The Sun newspaper has apologised for an article that purportedly showed how easy it is for potential terrorists to travel across Europe, which turned out to be fake.
Social media videos: the end of Journalism?
Native social media videos are the next evolution in news consumption. Producers who were once battling with channel flicking are now trying to catch your eye online before you click past. And some news outlets Al Jazeera's AJ+, Buzzfeed and NowThis have so far enjoyed success with their online models.
YouTube has just turned ten this year but thanks to Facebook's new video strategy and the rising popularity of platforms like Instagram and Snapchat, the audience for videos on social media has grown exponentially and the competition for audience share has grown very fierce. Short form text on screen and rapid fire visuals feature prominently in the native world, but how much does the quest for instant gratification affect the quality of the journalism?
The Listening Post's Paolo Ganino reports on native social news videos and what this new genre says about how we consume news.
Dutch filmmakers Sacha Harland and AlexanderSpoor from the YouTube channel, Dit Is Normaal (This Is Normal) recently conducted an experiment on the streets of The Netherlands. They selected a few choice passages from the Bible, disguised it as a Quran, and then asked passers-by what they thought about the writings. The results say a lot about the unconscious bias that is present in many of us. The Holy QuranExperiment has racked up millions of views online.
- Subscribe to our channel: http://bit.ly/AJSubscribe
- Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/AJEnglish
- Find us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/aljazeera
- Check out our website: http://www.aljazeera.com/

10:15

Covering the San Bernardino mass shooting - The Listening Post (Lead)

Covering the San Bernardino mass shooting - The Listening Post (Lead)

Covering the San Bernardino mass shooting - The Listening Post (Lead)

Two days after the San Bernardino mass shooting, scores of reporters stormed into the home of Syed Farook and Tashfeen Malik, two of the crime's main suspects, broadcasting live while rummaging through their personal effects.
Airing images of family members and releasing sensitive material that only a few hours earlier had been part of an FBI investigation, the coverage brought the journalistic ethics of a number of news organisations into question.
Hashtags like #Thisisntjournalism were trending while reporters were still in the house, live on air.
The ensuing media coverage, which combines two big issues in the US right now - the so-called war on terror and gun control - prompted Republican presidential contender, Donald Trump, to call for a blanket ban on Muslims entering the US, while several media outlets went into a frenzy focusing on the suspects' religious beliefs as a primary motive for the killings.
Talking us through the story are: Erik Wemple, The Washington Post's media critic; Kelly McBride, the vice president of the Poynter Institute; Ali Harb, a reporter with Arab American News; and NPR's media correspondent David Folkenflik.
- Subscribe to our channel: http://bit.ly/AJSubscribe
- Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/AJEnglish
- Find us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/aljazeera
- Check out our website: http://www.aljazeera.com/

How'd We Miss the San Bernardino Shooter's ISIS Facebook Post?!?

The San Bernardino shooter posted allegiance to ISIS on Facebook... so how'd we miss that? Why'd we let her into the country?

6:16

San Bernardino County Jail, Deputy Educated

San Bernardino County Jail, Deputy Educated

San Bernardino County Jail, Deputy Educated

GoFundMe https://m.gofund.me/defending-our-constitutional-rights
Patreon https://www.patreon.com/californiaguardian
Paypal https://paypal.me/californiaguardian
Help fight for your Constitutional protections. Out and about in San Bernardino with HDCW and Teen4Justice came across the County Jail. Support https://www.gofundme.com/defending-our-constitutional-rights This video is for educational and training purposes and contains news worthy content meant to educate and inform the viewer

San Bernardino Shooters: Jihad FB Post Fallacy Revealed

San Bernardino shooting suspects Syed Farook and Tashfeen Malik did not pledge their allegiance to ISIS on Facebook before the December 2 attack, according to FBI director James Comey who told a press conference on Wednesday morning that they communicated in "private, direct messages." This means that Malik's views weren't discussed openly at all, as the the New York Times reported on December 12, and would not have been caught by any review process. Is there any evidence that Farook and Malik conveyed jihadist sentiments on social media? Watch it on the Lip News with ElliotHill and Mark Sovel.
http://www.slate.com/blogs/the_slatest/2015/12/16/fbi_now_says_san_bernardino_shooters_didn_t_post_facebook_jihad_messages.html
Newest Lip News playlist:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=derCzswOz_k&index=1&list=PLjk3H0GXhhGcjJDo6cQBCQprDMQyUQY3r
CRIMETIME clips playlist –
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tZOhzW_QfLE&index=1&list=PLjk3H0GXhhGeC9DbpSnIvd2i9BHh2dBvv
BYOD (Bring Your Own Doc) Highlight Videos-
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w83eIj9jvbo&index=1&list=PLjk3H0GXhhGeu2DCf6Ouo7hTsA5QB2MAL
MEDIA MAYHEM short videos playlist -
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xx6bGm0Mma4&index=1&list=PLjk3H0GXhhGcz4un-zws5sMlCLk3NNjDP
http://www.thelip.tv
https://www.facebook.com/thelip.tv
http://www.youtube.com/theliptv

9:48

Inside the Command Post #17 - SBFD

Inside the Command Post #17 - SBFD

Inside the Command Post #17 - SBFD

http://westcoast911.com A look Inside the Command Post. SBFDCompany and ChiefOfficers arriving on scene and their Size-Up process. This video clip was shot during the Memorial Day weekend of 2009. First arriving SBFD units found a single family dwelling with potential backdraft conditions. The need to perform and coordinate vertical ventilation is crucial for firefighter safety

12:34

ABANDONED BETHANY HOUSE IN SAN BERNARDINO (SCARY!!!)

ABANDONED BETHANY HOUSE IN SAN BERNARDINO (SCARY!!!)

ABANDONED BETHANY HOUSE IN SAN BERNARDINO (SCARY!!!)

The Bethany House, also referred to as “The Bethelem House” is known to many people as a women’s shelter or asylum. The area The Bethany House is located on was also used as a private military post during the Cold War. Beyond the Bethany House are also a variety of more abandoned buildings near it which look to be military related. The House itself has a history of murders and ghosts still around till this day haunting the area.
(Feel free to change quality settings to 1080p since I did film off my iPhone )
Equipment: DJI Osmo 2 (phone stabilizer)
********FOLLOW ME ELSEWHERE*********
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/Ali_mqz
Feel free to subscribe & turn on post notifications for upcoming videos! I will be starting challenges with my boyfriend, so any recommendations are welcomed below in the comment section! Enjoy!!:)

First Amendment Audit: City Of Colton And San Bernardino post office

This video is for educational and informational purposes only

published: 07 Aug 2018

San Bernardino: Broken | Los Angeles Times

San Bernardino is the poorest city of its size in California, mired in its fourth year of bankruptcy. Industries left, the middle class shrank, the working poor struggle to rise and the destitute fall. Yet there are people in San Bernardino who work tirelessly to resurrect the city for the next generations. Although their paths are different, their trajectories meet at the same question: Can San Bernardino be saved?
SUBSCRIBE FOR MORE VIDEOS AND NEWShttp://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=losangelestimes
LET'S CONNECT:
Google+ ► https://plus.google.com/+latimes
Facebook ► https://www.facebook.com/latimes
Twitter ► https://twitter.com/LATimesL.A. Times ► http://www.latimes.com/

published: 09 Nov 2015

San Bernardino shooting: How not to cover breaking news - The Listening Post (Full)

As televised news events go, it had a touch of the surreal about it.
Two days after the San Bernardino mass shooting, scores of reporters stormed into the home of Syed Farook and Tashfeen Malik, two of the crime's main suspects, broadcasting live while rummaging through their personal effects.
Airing images of family members and releasing sensitive material that only a few hours earlier had been part of an FBI investigation, the coverage brought the journalistic ethics of a number of news organisations into question.
Hashtags like #Thisisntjournalism were trending while reporters were still in the house, live on air.
The ensuing media coverage, which combines two big issues in the US right now - the so-called 'war on terror' and gun control - prompted Republican presidential contender,...

published: 12 Dec 2015

Covering the San Bernardino mass shooting - The Listening Post (Lead)

Two days after the San Bernardino mass shooting, scores of reporters stormed into the home of Syed Farook and Tashfeen Malik, two of the crime's main suspects, broadcasting live while rummaging through their personal effects.
Airing images of family members and releasing sensitive material that only a few hours earlier had been part of an FBI investigation, the coverage brought the journalistic ethics of a number of news organisations into question.
Hashtags like #Thisisntjournalism were trending while reporters were still in the house, live on air.
The ensuing media coverage, which combines two big issues in the US right now - the so-called war on terror and gun control - prompted Republican presidential contender, Donald Trump, to call for a blanket ban on Muslims entering the US, whi...

How'd We Miss the San Bernardino Shooter's ISIS Facebook Post?!?

The San Bernardino shooter posted allegiance to ISIS on Facebook... so how'd we miss that? Why'd we let her into the country?

published: 16 Dec 2015

San Bernardino County Jail, Deputy Educated

GoFundMe https://m.gofund.me/defending-our-constitutional-rights
Patreon https://www.patreon.com/californiaguardian
Paypal https://paypal.me/californiaguardian
Help fight for your Constitutional protections. Out and about in San Bernardino with HDCW and Teen4Justice came across the County Jail. Support https://www.gofundme.com/defending-our-constitutional-rights This video is for educational and training purposes and contains news worthy content meant to educate and inform the viewer

San Bernardino Shooters: Jihad FB Post Fallacy Revealed

San Bernardino shooting suspects Syed Farook and Tashfeen Malik did not pledge their allegiance to ISIS on Facebook before the December 2 attack, according to FBI director James Comey who told a press conference on Wednesday morning that they communicated in "private, direct messages." This means that Malik's views weren't discussed openly at all, as the the New York Times reported on December 12, and would not have been caught by any review process. Is there any evidence that Farook and Malik conveyed jihadist sentiments on social media? Watch it on the Lip News with ElliotHill and Mark Sovel.
http://www.slate.com/blogs/the_slatest/2015/12/16/fbi_now_says_san_bernardino_shooters_didn_t_post_facebook_jihad_messages.html
Newest Lip News playlist:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=derCzswOz...

published: 17 Dec 2015

Inside the Command Post #17 - SBFD

http://westcoast911.com A look Inside the Command Post. SBFDCompany and ChiefOfficers arriving on scene and their Size-Up process. This video clip was shot during the Memorial Day weekend of 2009. First arriving SBFD units found a single family dwelling with potential backdraft conditions. The need to perform and coordinate vertical ventilation is crucial for firefighter safety

published: 26 May 2009

ABANDONED BETHANY HOUSE IN SAN BERNARDINO (SCARY!!!)

The Bethany House, also referred to as “The Bethelem House” is known to many people as a women’s shelter or asylum. The area The Bethany House is located on was also used as a private military post during the Cold War. Beyond the Bethany House are also a variety of more abandoned buildings near it which look to be military related. The House itself has a history of murders and ghosts still around till this day haunting the area.
(Feel free to change quality settings to 1080p since I did film off my iPhone )
Equipment: DJI Osmo 2 (phone stabilizer)
********FOLLOW ME ELSEWHERE*********
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/Ali_mqz
Feel free to subscribe & turn on post notifications for upcoming videos! I will be starting challenges with my boyfriend, so any recommendations are welcomed ...

The San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department's TrainingAcademy is certified by California'sPeace Officer Standards and Training (P.O.S.T.). The purpose of the physical agility is to assure the department that the applicant has sufficient endurance, strength and agility to perform physical tasks similar to those that could be required of a Deputy Sheriff. The physical agility test is the exact test required to pass the Sheriff's Academy. The physical agility test consists of the following five events:
1) 99 YardObstacle Course - Run a 99 yard obstacle course consisting of several turns, 34 inch obstacle and a number of curb height obstacles
2) BodyDrag - Lift and drag 165 pound life-like dummy 32 feet
3) Chain LinkFence - Climb a 6 foot chain link fence followed by a 30 yard run
4) Solid Fence Climb - Climb a 6 foot solid wall followed by a 30 yard run
5) 500 yard run - Run 500 yards (equivalent to 1 lap plus 60 yards of a standard running track)
The test is scored on a "total points" basis. All applicants must accumulate enough points to meet the minimum passing score.

The San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department's TrainingAcademy is certified by California'sPeace Officer Standards and Training (P.O.S.T.). The purpose of the physical agility is to assure the department that the applicant has sufficient endurance, strength and agility to perform physical tasks similar to those that could be required of a Deputy Sheriff. The physical agility test is the exact test required to pass the Sheriff's Academy. The physical agility test consists of the following five events:
1) 99 YardObstacle Course - Run a 99 yard obstacle course consisting of several turns, 34 inch obstacle and a number of curb height obstacles
2) BodyDrag - Lift and drag 165 pound life-like dummy 32 feet
3) Chain LinkFence - Climb a 6 foot chain link fence followed by a 30 yard run
4) Solid Fence Climb - Climb a 6 foot solid wall followed by a 30 yard run
5) 500 yard run - Run 500 yards (equivalent to 1 lap plus 60 yards of a standard running track)
The test is scored on a "total points" basis. All applicants must accumulate enough points to meet the minimum passing score.

San Bernardino: Broken | Los Angeles Times

San Bernardino is the poorest city of its size in California, mired in its fourth year of bankruptcy. Industries left, the middle class shrank, the working poor...

San Bernardino is the poorest city of its size in California, mired in its fourth year of bankruptcy. Industries left, the middle class shrank, the working poor struggle to rise and the destitute fall. Yet there are people in San Bernardino who work tirelessly to resurrect the city for the next generations. Although their paths are different, their trajectories meet at the same question: Can San Bernardino be saved?
SUBSCRIBE FOR MORE VIDEOS AND NEWShttp://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=losangelestimes
LET'S CONNECT:
Google+ ► https://plus.google.com/+latimes
Facebook ► https://www.facebook.com/latimes
Twitter ► https://twitter.com/LATimesL.A. Times ► http://www.latimes.com/

San Bernardino is the poorest city of its size in California, mired in its fourth year of bankruptcy. Industries left, the middle class shrank, the working poor struggle to rise and the destitute fall. Yet there are people in San Bernardino who work tirelessly to resurrect the city for the next generations. Although their paths are different, their trajectories meet at the same question: Can San Bernardino be saved?
SUBSCRIBE FOR MORE VIDEOS AND NEWShttp://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=losangelestimes
LET'S CONNECT:
Google+ ► https://plus.google.com/+latimes
Facebook ► https://www.facebook.com/latimes
Twitter ► https://twitter.com/LATimesL.A. Times ► http://www.latimes.com/

San Bernardino shooting: How not to cover breaking news - The Listening Post (Full)

As televised news events go, it had a touch of the surreal about it.
Two days after the San Bernardino mass shooting, scores of reporters stormed into the home...

As televised news events go, it had a touch of the surreal about it.
Two days after the San Bernardino mass shooting, scores of reporters stormed into the home of Syed Farook and Tashfeen Malik, two of the crime's main suspects, broadcasting live while rummaging through their personal effects.
Airing images of family members and releasing sensitive material that only a few hours earlier had been part of an FBI investigation, the coverage brought the journalistic ethics of a number of news organisations into question.
Hashtags like #Thisisntjournalism were trending while reporters were still in the house, live on air.
The ensuing media coverage, which combines two big issues in the US right now - the so-called 'war on terror' and gun control - prompted Republican presidential contender, Donald Trump, to call for a blanket ban on Muslims entering the US, while several media outlets went into a frenzy focusing on the suspects religious beliefs as a primary motive for the killings.
Talking us through the story are: Erik Wemple, The Washington Post's media critic; Kelly McBride, the vice president of the Poynter Institute; Ali Harb, a reporter with Arab American News and NPR's media correspondent David Folkenflik.
Other stories on Our Radar this week: In Somalia, a journalist has died after a bomb was planted in her car and analysts are blaming the armed group al-Shabab. In China, four journalists have been suspended for a typo that claimed President Xi had resigned and Britain’s The Sun newspaper has apologised for an article that purportedly showed how easy it is for potential terrorists to travel across Europe, which turned out to be fake.
Social media videos: the end of Journalism?
Native social media videos are the next evolution in news consumption. Producers who were once battling with channel flicking are now trying to catch your eye online before you click past. And some news outlets Al Jazeera's AJ+, Buzzfeed and NowThis have so far enjoyed success with their online models.
YouTube has just turned ten this year but thanks to Facebook's new video strategy and the rising popularity of platforms like Instagram and Snapchat, the audience for videos on social media has grown exponentially and the competition for audience share has grown very fierce. Short form text on screen and rapid fire visuals feature prominently in the native world, but how much does the quest for instant gratification affect the quality of the journalism?
The Listening Post's Paolo Ganino reports on native social news videos and what this new genre says about how we consume news.
Dutch filmmakers Sacha Harland and AlexanderSpoor from the YouTube channel, Dit Is Normaal (This Is Normal) recently conducted an experiment on the streets of The Netherlands. They selected a few choice passages from the Bible, disguised it as a Quran, and then asked passers-by what they thought about the writings. The results say a lot about the unconscious bias that is present in many of us. The Holy QuranExperiment has racked up millions of views online.
- Subscribe to our channel: http://bit.ly/AJSubscribe
- Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/AJEnglish
- Find us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/aljazeera
- Check out our website: http://www.aljazeera.com/

As televised news events go, it had a touch of the surreal about it.
Two days after the San Bernardino mass shooting, scores of reporters stormed into the home of Syed Farook and Tashfeen Malik, two of the crime's main suspects, broadcasting live while rummaging through their personal effects.
Airing images of family members and releasing sensitive material that only a few hours earlier had been part of an FBI investigation, the coverage brought the journalistic ethics of a number of news organisations into question.
Hashtags like #Thisisntjournalism were trending while reporters were still in the house, live on air.
The ensuing media coverage, which combines two big issues in the US right now - the so-called 'war on terror' and gun control - prompted Republican presidential contender, Donald Trump, to call for a blanket ban on Muslims entering the US, while several media outlets went into a frenzy focusing on the suspects religious beliefs as a primary motive for the killings.
Talking us through the story are: Erik Wemple, The Washington Post's media critic; Kelly McBride, the vice president of the Poynter Institute; Ali Harb, a reporter with Arab American News and NPR's media correspondent David Folkenflik.
Other stories on Our Radar this week: In Somalia, a journalist has died after a bomb was planted in her car and analysts are blaming the armed group al-Shabab. In China, four journalists have been suspended for a typo that claimed President Xi had resigned and Britain’s The Sun newspaper has apologised for an article that purportedly showed how easy it is for potential terrorists to travel across Europe, which turned out to be fake.
Social media videos: the end of Journalism?
Native social media videos are the next evolution in news consumption. Producers who were once battling with channel flicking are now trying to catch your eye online before you click past. And some news outlets Al Jazeera's AJ+, Buzzfeed and NowThis have so far enjoyed success with their online models.
YouTube has just turned ten this year but thanks to Facebook's new video strategy and the rising popularity of platforms like Instagram and Snapchat, the audience for videos on social media has grown exponentially and the competition for audience share has grown very fierce. Short form text on screen and rapid fire visuals feature prominently in the native world, but how much does the quest for instant gratification affect the quality of the journalism?
The Listening Post's Paolo Ganino reports on native social news videos and what this new genre says about how we consume news.
Dutch filmmakers Sacha Harland and AlexanderSpoor from the YouTube channel, Dit Is Normaal (This Is Normal) recently conducted an experiment on the streets of The Netherlands. They selected a few choice passages from the Bible, disguised it as a Quran, and then asked passers-by what they thought about the writings. The results say a lot about the unconscious bias that is present in many of us. The Holy QuranExperiment has racked up millions of views online.
- Subscribe to our channel: http://bit.ly/AJSubscribe
- Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/AJEnglish
- Find us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/aljazeera
- Check out our website: http://www.aljazeera.com/

Two days after the San Bernardino mass shooting, scores of reporters stormed into the home of Syed Farook and Tashfeen Malik, two of the crime's main suspects, broadcasting live while rummaging through their personal effects.
Airing images of family members and releasing sensitive material that only a few hours earlier had been part of an FBI investigation, the coverage brought the journalistic ethics of a number of news organisations into question.
Hashtags like #Thisisntjournalism were trending while reporters were still in the house, live on air.
The ensuing media coverage, which combines two big issues in the US right now - the so-called war on terror and gun control - prompted Republican presidential contender, Donald Trump, to call for a blanket ban on Muslims entering the US, while several media outlets went into a frenzy focusing on the suspects' religious beliefs as a primary motive for the killings.
Talking us through the story are: Erik Wemple, The Washington Post's media critic; Kelly McBride, the vice president of the Poynter Institute; Ali Harb, a reporter with Arab American News; and NPR's media correspondent David Folkenflik.
- Subscribe to our channel: http://bit.ly/AJSubscribe
- Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/AJEnglish
- Find us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/aljazeera
- Check out our website: http://www.aljazeera.com/

Two days after the San Bernardino mass shooting, scores of reporters stormed into the home of Syed Farook and Tashfeen Malik, two of the crime's main suspects, broadcasting live while rummaging through their personal effects.
Airing images of family members and releasing sensitive material that only a few hours earlier had been part of an FBI investigation, the coverage brought the journalistic ethics of a number of news organisations into question.
Hashtags like #Thisisntjournalism were trending while reporters were still in the house, live on air.
The ensuing media coverage, which combines two big issues in the US right now - the so-called war on terror and gun control - prompted Republican presidential contender, Donald Trump, to call for a blanket ban on Muslims entering the US, while several media outlets went into a frenzy focusing on the suspects' religious beliefs as a primary motive for the killings.
Talking us through the story are: Erik Wemple, The Washington Post's media critic; Kelly McBride, the vice president of the Poynter Institute; Ali Harb, a reporter with Arab American News; and NPR's media correspondent David Folkenflik.
- Subscribe to our channel: http://bit.ly/AJSubscribe
- Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/AJEnglish
- Find us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/aljazeera
- Check out our website: http://www.aljazeera.com/

GoFundMe https://m.gofund.me/defending-our-constitutional-rights
Patreon https://www.patreon.com/californiaguardian
Paypal https://paypal.me/californiaguardian
Help fight for your Constitutional protections. Out and about in San Bernardino with HDCW and Teen4Justice came across the County Jail. Support https://www.gofundme.com/defending-our-constitutional-rights This video is for educational and training purposes and contains news worthy content meant to educate and inform the viewer

GoFundMe https://m.gofund.me/defending-our-constitutional-rights
Patreon https://www.patreon.com/californiaguardian
Paypal https://paypal.me/californiaguardian
Help fight for your Constitutional protections. Out and about in San Bernardino with HDCW and Teen4Justice came across the County Jail. Support https://www.gofundme.com/defending-our-constitutional-rights This video is for educational and training purposes and contains news worthy content meant to educate and inform the viewer

San Bernardino shooting suspects Syed Farook and Tashfeen Malik did not pledge their allegiance to ISIS on Facebook before the December 2 attack, according to FBI director James Comey who told a press conference on Wednesday morning that they communicated in "private, direct messages." This means that Malik's views weren't discussed openly at all, as the the New York Times reported on December 12, and would not have been caught by any review process. Is there any evidence that Farook and Malik conveyed jihadist sentiments on social media? Watch it on the Lip News with ElliotHill and Mark Sovel.
http://www.slate.com/blogs/the_slatest/2015/12/16/fbi_now_says_san_bernardino_shooters_didn_t_post_facebook_jihad_messages.html
Newest Lip News playlist:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=derCzswOz_k&index=1&list=PLjk3H0GXhhGcjJDo6cQBCQprDMQyUQY3r
CRIMETIME clips playlist –
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tZOhzW_QfLE&index=1&list=PLjk3H0GXhhGeC9DbpSnIvd2i9BHh2dBvv
BYOD (Bring Your Own Doc) Highlight Videos-
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w83eIj9jvbo&index=1&list=PLjk3H0GXhhGeu2DCf6Ouo7hTsA5QB2MAL
MEDIA MAYHEM short videos playlist -
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xx6bGm0Mma4&index=1&list=PLjk3H0GXhhGcz4un-zws5sMlCLk3NNjDP
http://www.thelip.tv
https://www.facebook.com/thelip.tv
http://www.youtube.com/theliptv

San Bernardino shooting suspects Syed Farook and Tashfeen Malik did not pledge their allegiance to ISIS on Facebook before the December 2 attack, according to FBI director James Comey who told a press conference on Wednesday morning that they communicated in "private, direct messages." This means that Malik's views weren't discussed openly at all, as the the New York Times reported on December 12, and would not have been caught by any review process. Is there any evidence that Farook and Malik conveyed jihadist sentiments on social media? Watch it on the Lip News with ElliotHill and Mark Sovel.
http://www.slate.com/blogs/the_slatest/2015/12/16/fbi_now_says_san_bernardino_shooters_didn_t_post_facebook_jihad_messages.html
Newest Lip News playlist:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=derCzswOz_k&index=1&list=PLjk3H0GXhhGcjJDo6cQBCQprDMQyUQY3r
CRIMETIME clips playlist –
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tZOhzW_QfLE&index=1&list=PLjk3H0GXhhGeC9DbpSnIvd2i9BHh2dBvv
BYOD (Bring Your Own Doc) Highlight Videos-
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w83eIj9jvbo&index=1&list=PLjk3H0GXhhGeu2DCf6Ouo7hTsA5QB2MAL
MEDIA MAYHEM short videos playlist -
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xx6bGm0Mma4&index=1&list=PLjk3H0GXhhGcz4un-zws5sMlCLk3NNjDP
http://www.thelip.tv
https://www.facebook.com/thelip.tv
http://www.youtube.com/theliptv

http://westcoast911.com A look Inside the Command Post. SBFDCompany and ChiefOfficers arriving on scene and their Size-Up process. This video clip was shot during the Memorial Day weekend of 2009. First arriving SBFD units found a single family dwelling with potential backdraft conditions. The need to perform and coordinate vertical ventilation is crucial for firefighter safety

http://westcoast911.com A look Inside the Command Post. SBFDCompany and ChiefOfficers arriving on scene and their Size-Up process. This video clip was shot during the Memorial Day weekend of 2009. First arriving SBFD units found a single family dwelling with potential backdraft conditions. The need to perform and coordinate vertical ventilation is crucial for firefighter safety

ABANDONED BETHANY HOUSE IN SAN BERNARDINO (SCARY!!!)

The Bethany House, also referred to as “The Bethelem House” is known to many people as a women’s shelter or asylum. The area The Bethany House is located on was...

The Bethany House, also referred to as “The Bethelem House” is known to many people as a women’s shelter or asylum. The area The Bethany House is located on was also used as a private military post during the Cold War. Beyond the Bethany House are also a variety of more abandoned buildings near it which look to be military related. The House itself has a history of murders and ghosts still around till this day haunting the area.
(Feel free to change quality settings to 1080p since I did film off my iPhone )
Equipment: DJI Osmo 2 (phone stabilizer)
********FOLLOW ME ELSEWHERE*********
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/Ali_mqz
Feel free to subscribe & turn on post notifications for upcoming videos! I will be starting challenges with my boyfriend, so any recommendations are welcomed below in the comment section! Enjoy!!:)

The Bethany House, also referred to as “The Bethelem House” is known to many people as a women’s shelter or asylum. The area The Bethany House is located on was also used as a private military post during the Cold War. Beyond the Bethany House are also a variety of more abandoned buildings near it which look to be military related. The House itself has a history of murders and ghosts still around till this day haunting the area.
(Feel free to change quality settings to 1080p since I did film off my iPhone )
Equipment: DJI Osmo 2 (phone stabilizer)
********FOLLOW ME ELSEWHERE*********
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/Ali_mqz
Feel free to subscribe & turn on post notifications for upcoming videos! I will be starting challenges with my boyfriend, so any recommendations are welcomed below in the comment section! Enjoy!!:)

Physical Agility Test

The San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department's TrainingAcademy is certified by California'sPeace Officer Standards and Training (P.O.S.T.). The purpose of the physical agility is to assure the department that the applicant has sufficient endurance, strength and agility to perform physical tasks similar to those that could be required of a Deputy Sheriff. The physical agility test is the exact test required to pass the Sheriff's Academy. The physical agility test consists of the following five events:
1) 99 YardObstacle Course - Run a 99 yard obstacle course consisting of several turns, 34 inch obstacle and a number of curb height obstacles
2) BodyDrag - Lift and drag 165 pound life-like dummy 32 feet
3) Chain LinkFence - Climb a 6 foot chain link fence followed by a 30 yard run
4) Solid Fence Climb - Climb a 6 foot solid wall followed by a 30 yard run
5) 500 yard run - Run 500 yards (equivalent to 1 lap plus 60 yards of a standard running track)
The test is scored on a "total points" basis. All applicants must accumulate enough points to meet the minimum passing score.

San Bernardino: Broken | Los Angeles Times

San Bernardino is the poorest city of its size in California, mired in its fourth year of bankruptcy. Industries left, the middle class shrank, the working poor struggle to rise and the destitute fall. Yet there are people in San Bernardino who work tirelessly to resurrect the city for the next generations. Although their paths are different, their trajectories meet at the same question: Can San Bernardino be saved?
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San Bernardino shooting: How not to cover breaking news - The Listening Post (Full)

As televised news events go, it had a touch of the surreal about it.
Two days after the San Bernardino mass shooting, scores of reporters stormed into the home of Syed Farook and Tashfeen Malik, two of the crime's main suspects, broadcasting live while rummaging through their personal effects.
Airing images of family members and releasing sensitive material that only a few hours earlier had been part of an FBI investigation, the coverage brought the journalistic ethics of a number of news organisations into question.
Hashtags like #Thisisntjournalism were trending while reporters were still in the house, live on air.
The ensuing media coverage, which combines two big issues in the US right now - the so-called 'war on terror' and gun control - prompted Republican presidential contender, Donald Trump, to call for a blanket ban on Muslims entering the US, while several media outlets went into a frenzy focusing on the suspects religious beliefs as a primary motive for the killings.
Talking us through the story are: Erik Wemple, The Washington Post's media critic; Kelly McBride, the vice president of the Poynter Institute; Ali Harb, a reporter with Arab American News and NPR's media correspondent David Folkenflik.
Other stories on Our Radar this week: In Somalia, a journalist has died after a bomb was planted in her car and analysts are blaming the armed group al-Shabab. In China, four journalists have been suspended for a typo that claimed President Xi had resigned and Britain’s The Sun newspaper has apologised for an article that purportedly showed how easy it is for potential terrorists to travel across Europe, which turned out to be fake.
Social media videos: the end of Journalism?
Native social media videos are the next evolution in news consumption. Producers who were once battling with channel flicking are now trying to catch your eye online before you click past. And some news outlets Al Jazeera's AJ+, Buzzfeed and NowThis have so far enjoyed success with their online models.
YouTube has just turned ten this year but thanks to Facebook's new video strategy and the rising popularity of platforms like Instagram and Snapchat, the audience for videos on social media has grown exponentially and the competition for audience share has grown very fierce. Short form text on screen and rapid fire visuals feature prominently in the native world, but how much does the quest for instant gratification affect the quality of the journalism?
The Listening Post's Paolo Ganino reports on native social news videos and what this new genre says about how we consume news.
Dutch filmmakers Sacha Harland and AlexanderSpoor from the YouTube channel, Dit Is Normaal (This Is Normal) recently conducted an experiment on the streets of The Netherlands. They selected a few choice passages from the Bible, disguised it as a Quran, and then asked passers-by what they thought about the writings. The results say a lot about the unconscious bias that is present in many of us. The Holy QuranExperiment has racked up millions of views online.
- Subscribe to our channel: http://bit.ly/AJSubscribe
- Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/AJEnglish
- Find us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/aljazeera
- Check out our website: http://www.aljazeera.com/

Covering the San Bernardino mass shooting - The Listening Post (Lead)

Two days after the San Bernardino mass shooting, scores of reporters stormed into the home of Syed Farook and Tashfeen Malik, two of the crime's main suspects, broadcasting live while rummaging through their personal effects.
Airing images of family members and releasing sensitive material that only a few hours earlier had been part of an FBI investigation, the coverage brought the journalistic ethics of a number of news organisations into question.
Hashtags like #Thisisntjournalism were trending while reporters were still in the house, live on air.
The ensuing media coverage, which combines two big issues in the US right now - the so-called war on terror and gun control - prompted Republican presidential contender, Donald Trump, to call for a blanket ban on Muslims entering the US, while several media outlets went into a frenzy focusing on the suspects' religious beliefs as a primary motive for the killings.
Talking us through the story are: Erik Wemple, The Washington Post's media critic; Kelly McBride, the vice president of the Poynter Institute; Ali Harb, a reporter with Arab American News; and NPR's media correspondent David Folkenflik.
- Subscribe to our channel: http://bit.ly/AJSubscribe
- Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/AJEnglish
- Find us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/aljazeera
- Check out our website: http://www.aljazeera.com/

San Bernardino County Jail, Deputy Educated

GoFundMe https://m.gofund.me/defending-our-constitutional-rights
Patreon https://www.patreon.com/californiaguardian
Paypal https://paypal.me/californiaguardian
Help fight for your Constitutional protections. Out and about in San Bernardino with HDCW and Teen4Justice came across the County Jail. Support https://www.gofundme.com/defending-our-constitutional-rights This video is for educational and training purposes and contains news worthy content meant to educate and inform the viewer

San Bernardino Shooters: Jihad FB Post Fallacy Revealed

San Bernardino shooting suspects Syed Farook and Tashfeen Malik did not pledge their allegiance to ISIS on Facebook before the December 2 attack, according to FBI director James Comey who told a press conference on Wednesday morning that they communicated in "private, direct messages." This means that Malik's views weren't discussed openly at all, as the the New York Times reported on December 12, and would not have been caught by any review process. Is there any evidence that Farook and Malik conveyed jihadist sentiments on social media? Watch it on the Lip News with ElliotHill and Mark Sovel.
http://www.slate.com/blogs/the_slatest/2015/12/16/fbi_now_says_san_bernardino_shooters_didn_t_post_facebook_jihad_messages.html
Newest Lip News playlist:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=derCzswOz_k&index=1&list=PLjk3H0GXhhGcjJDo6cQBCQprDMQyUQY3r
CRIMETIME clips playlist –
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tZOhzW_QfLE&index=1&list=PLjk3H0GXhhGeC9DbpSnIvd2i9BHh2dBvv
BYOD (Bring Your Own Doc) Highlight Videos-
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w83eIj9jvbo&index=1&list=PLjk3H0GXhhGeu2DCf6Ouo7hTsA5QB2MAL
MEDIA MAYHEM short videos playlist -
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xx6bGm0Mma4&index=1&list=PLjk3H0GXhhGcz4un-zws5sMlCLk3NNjDP
http://www.thelip.tv
https://www.facebook.com/thelip.tv
http://www.youtube.com/theliptv

Inside the Command Post #17 - SBFD

http://westcoast911.com A look Inside the Command Post. SBFDCompany and ChiefOfficers arriving on scene and their Size-Up process. This video clip was shot during the Memorial Day weekend of 2009. First arriving SBFD units found a single family dwelling with potential backdraft conditions. The need to perform and coordinate vertical ventilation is crucial for firefighter safety

ABANDONED BETHANY HOUSE IN SAN BERNARDINO (SCARY!!!)

The Bethany House, also referred to as “The Bethelem House” is known to many people as a women’s shelter or asylum. The area The Bethany House is located on was also used as a private military post during the Cold War. Beyond the Bethany House are also a variety of more abandoned buildings near it which look to be military related. The House itself has a history of murders and ghosts still around till this day haunting the area.
(Feel free to change quality settings to 1080p since I did film off my iPhone )
Equipment: DJI Osmo 2 (phone stabilizer)
********FOLLOW ME ELSEWHERE*********
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/Ali_mqz
Feel free to subscribe & turn on post notifications for upcoming videos! I will be starting challenges with my boyfriend, so any recommendations are welcomed below in the comment section! Enjoy!!:)

The San Bernardino Tunnel is part of the A13 as a single carriageway freeway and therefore passes through one bore without a central physical structure. As there is only one lane per direction, overtaking (passing other vehicles) inside the tunnel is not permitted. The speed limit of 80km/h (50mph) is enforced by means of speed-check cameras. This road tunnel is considerably less prone to traffic jams than the St. Gotthard Tunnel.

The old name Vogelberg may refer to the migratory birds who pass by here every year in large flocks. These have now also discovered the tunnel as a "shortcut". Sometimes, the traffic must be stopped so that the birds find their way undisturbed.

How cities took the lead in a new statewide law requiring pet stores to sell shelter animals only Brookside Dairy photo delivers memories How SanBernardinoCounty hopes to save animal lives Pets not eating more marijuana in California, post Prop 64, data shows ... of SanBernardino....

"THE LAST REAL JAIL" San Bernardino Jail, w/Antelo...

San Bernardino Shooters: Jihad FB Post Fallacy Rev...

Inside the Command Post #17 - SBFD...

ABANDONED BETHANY HOUSE IN SAN BERNARDINO (SCARY!!...

San Bernardino

I heard that you've been travelling the San Francisco sceneTried your luck in Oregon and saw the in betweenPushing your luck so farYou've seen what you've seenTry to out run your demonsBroken American dreamYou got the burning yearningAnd those small town dreamsBought the one way ticketIt's not what it seemsGotta get out gotta leave that place!I heard that you got off in SAN BERNARDINO

How cities took the lead in a new statewide law requiring pet stores to sell shelter animals only Brookside Dairy photo delivers memories How SanBernardinoCounty hopes to save animal lives Pets not eating more marijuana in California, post Prop 64, data shows ... of SanBernardino....

Now Local SanBernardinoCounty gang prosecutor resigns after probe into social media rants. Michael Selyem, a lead gang prosecutor in SanBernardino County, was placed on administrative leave for a series of offensive social media posts. (Jennifer Cappuccio Maher / SanBernardino Sun) ... On Wednesday, SanBernardino County Public Defender G....

Former SanBernardinoCounty gang prosecutor Michael Selyem, who was suspended in the wake of his racist rants on social media that triggered a backlash from civil rights leaders, has resigned from the District Attorney’s Office...SanBernardino County Public Defender G....

Teachers and certificated staff working in school districts throughout SanBernardinoCounty started off the new year with late paychecks, and for some, penalties for bounced checks ...SanBernardinoCity Unified posted a memo to its website Wednesday apologizing for the miscommunication and inconvenience....

A federal judge has dismissed lawsuits seeking to hold Facebook, Google and Twitter liable to victims of the December 2015 mass shooting in SanBernardino, California for letting Islamic State flourish on their social media platforms ... The postSanBernardino shooting lawsuits vs Facebook, Google, Twitter dismissed appeared first on Raw Story ... ....